Aortic Calcification - is it a Marker for Carotid Artery Stenosis?

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Atherosclerosis is the major contributor for the morbidity and mortality for the variety of cardiovascular diseases.

Aortic calcification on x-ray is a marker for arterial atherosclerosis and an independent prognostic factor for the morbidity and mortality from a cardiovascular event.

Carotid artery stenoses is the current accepted indication for interventional treatment of carotid artery, for the prevention of embolic event, while other arterial atherosclerosis indication, is for hemodynamic disturbance and ischemic outcome.

This research will try to find whether incidental aortic calcification can predict carotid artery stenosis.

Two groups will be chosen: group A - patients who had CT scan in the hospital (for different indications); Group B - patients (not from the first group) who have a significant carotid artery stenosis who are indicated for interventional treatment.

The data to analyze:

Group A - Patients with aortic calcification, carotid artery stenosis, and patients with both Group B - Patients who have aortic calcification Comparison of the populations within the group and among the two will show if a significant correlation between aortic calcification and carotid artery stenosis exist.

Atherosclerosis is a diffuse multicentric disease in the arterial tree, affecting target organs (heart, aorta, lower extremities, carotid arteries etc.). Mostly located in arterial bifurcations (Iliac and carotid artery bifurcations) or in constant repetitive arterial trauma (Adductors tendon, Hunter's canal). The invasive treatment (endovascular, surgery) is preserved for patients with critical arterial stenosis or occlusion in symptomatic patients. Exceptions are the carotid arteries: the majority of patients with a severe internal carotid artery stenosis are asymptomatic patients, which are treated for the prevention embolic events (TIA's or CVA's).

Current articles are observational, and describe retrospectively the morbidity and mortality from atherosclerosis with aortic calcification.

the investigators assumption is that if aortic calcification is a marker for diffuse atherosclerosis, it has good correlation to criptogenous carotid artery disease, and can lead to early carotid artery disease evaluation and treatment.

Group A - patients (age >40 years), that had a CT scan (chest/abdomen) for any indication, will be evaluated for aortic calcifications. The patients will be additionally examined for carotid artery stenosis by Doppler ultrasound. (100 patients) Group B - Patients that were diagnosed by Doppler ultrasound, and were found to have a severe carotid artery stenosis. These patients are scheduled for a computed tomography-angiography (regardless for the research) of the cervical arteries, will be additionally complete abdominal/chest tomography scan, without additional contrast. (50 patients).

Results - will be statistically evaluated - Group A - number of patients with aortic calcification, number of patients with carotid artery stenosis; Group B - Number of patients that have associated aortic calcification.

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Ages Eligible for Study:

40 Years and older (Adult, Senior)

Sexes Eligible for Study:

All

Accepts Healthy Volunteers:

No

Sampling Method:

Non-Probability Sample

Study Population

Group A - patients who had a CT scan Group B - patients who have severe carotid artery stenosis

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Group A - patients, age 40-99 years, that had a CT scan for any indication Group B - patients with severe carotid artery stenosis, that indicated for treatment